Soileau v. Southern Pacific RR

640 So. 2d 417, 1994 WL 138485
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 20, 1994
Docket93-1064
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 640 So. 2d 417 (Soileau v. Southern Pacific RR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soileau v. Southern Pacific RR, 640 So. 2d 417, 1994 WL 138485 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

640 So.2d 417 (1994)

W. Glenn SOILEAU, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 93-1064.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

April 20, 1994.

*419 Donald Soileau, Mamou, for W. Glenn Soileau.

John Edmund McElligott Jr. and Kyle Liney Mark Gideon, Lafayette, for Southern Pacific R.R., et al.

Patrick J. Briney, Lafayette, for St. Martin Parish Police Jury.

Virginia Denise Banks Listach, Baton Rouge, for State, DOTD.

Gregory Kent Moroux, Lafayette, for Scottsdale Ins.

Michael A. Harris, Baton Rouge, for City of Breaux Bridge.

Before KNOLL, COOKS and WOODARD, JJ.

KNOLL, Judge.

This personal injury case involves a moped motorized bike accident on the Refinery Bridge in Breaux Bridge during the 1991 Crawfish Festival. The Refinery Bridge has a set of railroad tracks through the center of the bridge surface which used to accommodate trains; now trains no longer use the bridge and the bridge use is limited to two-way vehicular traffic and pedestrians. W. Glenn Soileau brought suit against the Southern Pacific Transportation Company (Southern Pacific), the St. Martin Parish Police Jury and its insurer, International Special Risk Services (International), the City of Breaux Bridge and its insurer, Scottsdale Insurance Company (Scottsdale), and the State of Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD). Soileau contended that his accident was caused by a severe pot hole on the Refinery Bridge and that the defendants were negligent and strictly liable for the defective condition which caused his damages. The suit against Southern Pacific, International and Scottsdale was tried by a jury and the remaining defendants, all political subdivisions of the state, were tried by the trial judge. The jury and the trial judge rendered verdict against Soileau and his claims were ordered dismissed with prejudice.

Soileau appeals, contending that the trial court erred: (1) by failing to allow the bridge inspection report of the State of Louisiana to be introduced into evidence; (2) by failing to allow the bridge inspection report of Southern Pacific to be introduced into evidence; (3) by failing to allow the bridge inspection report of St. Martin Parish to be introduced into evidence; (4) by failing to allow the Breaux Bridge city engineer to testify about his inspection of the bridge three weeks prior to the accident; (5) by failing to allow testimony into evidence of the city council's meeting with the city engineer three weeks before the accident; (6) by failing to allow the expert testimony of Gene Moody about the condition of the surface and subsurface of the bridge; (7) by failing to allow the expert from Louisiana Paving to testify about the improper repair of the bridge surface three days before the accident; (8) by prohibiting Soileau to enter into evidence correspondence from the city engineer advising that the bridge be closed to public use; (9) in failing to find that the accident occurred on the bridge and then dismissing the case against Breaux Bridge, St. Martin Parish, Southern Pacific and the state; (10) in assessing 100% of the fault to Soileau; (11) in allowing testimony of Soileau's disciplinary hearing before the Louisiana Supreme Court seven years earlier as evidence of his problem with alcoholic beverages; (12) in finding *420 that none of the defendants had custody of the bridge; (13) in failing to allow the jury to hear Breaux Bridge's responses to Soileau's requests for admission of fact; and, (14) in failing to award damages. We affirm.

FACTS

The learned trial judge detailed the facts of this accident in her written reasons for judgment which we adopt as our own:

"The uncontested facts are as follows. Around midnight of May 4/May 5, 1991 a paramedic with Acadian Ambulance received a call to respond to an accident on the Refinery Bridge. When he arrived at the western end of the bridge, he found the plaintiff [Soileau] on the ground with an obvious leg injury. The plaintiff refused the services of Acadian Ambulance. With the assistance of sheriff's deputies who had come to the scene, he remounted his moped and drove back across the bridge to the eastern end, down the approach road, and the several additional blocks to his home. From there he went to a hospital in Lafayette in a private car. The injury proved severeal, eventually requiring knee replacement. The plaintiff did not report the accident. There was no investigation or police report.
* * * * * *
The plaintiff gave the following account of his accident. Sometime after midnight on the Saturday/Sunday of the Crawfish Festival [of 1991], he and his business partner left their downtown bar, the Crawfish Swamp, to visit the partners' daiquiri stand in Parc Hardy, which was the other site for the Festival. As was their custom, they each rode a moped. This mode of transportation facilitated traveling in the city which was jammed with cars and pedestrians visiting the City for the Festival. They stopped at his partner's house, crossed the northernmost of the three bridges which span the Bayou Teche in Breaux Bridge, visited Parc Hardy, and then made a stop at the plaintiff's house.
The plaintiff decided that they should return to downtown by way of a shortcut, the Refinery Street Bridge, the middle of the three bridges. With the plaintiff in the lead, the two mopeds cut through a path in an open lot, approaching the bridge from the north, at a right angle to the approach road. They mounted the bank, turned to the right approximately 20 yards to the east of the bridge, and proceeded onto it. They were traveling in the center of the westbound lane, between the railroad rails which run the length of the bridge on the left and the railing on the right. Their speed was approximately 10 to 12 miles per hour.
About three-quarters across the bridge, which is apparently 240 feet in total length, the plaintiff testified that he saw a pot-hole 4 to 5 inches wide. He released the throttle and applied the brakes but was unable to steer around the hole. The hole caused him to lose control of the moped; he swerved to the left and into the rut or open strip which runs next to the rail of the railroad track. Unable to steer, he continued in that rut for approximately 30 to 40 feet, applying his brakes for the entire distance. He then lost his balance, fell from the moped, and struck his knee upon the bridge surface. He skidded about 15 feet and came to rest just beyond the end of the bridge. His partner, claiming to be an eyewitness to the accident, was traveling about 15 feet to the rear. He saw the rear light go up and down and then saw sparks.
The defendants contend that the accident did not occur on the bridge but somewhere off the western end, probably in the area where the railroad tracks curve off the road, creating particularly rough conditions on the surface. The basis for this conclusion is that all of those persons who testified about the scene—the plaintiff, the business partner, the Acadian Ambulance paramedic, the three sheriff's deputies— placed the plaintiff at rest off the bridge. The paramedic testified that he was as much as 40 to 60 feet away."
At the conclusion of Soileau's case, the trial court granted a directed verdict on the negligence claims against Southern Pacific, but allowed the jury to decide the strict liability claim against Southern Pacific. The trial court also granted DOTD's motion for directed *421

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
640 So. 2d 417, 1994 WL 138485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soileau-v-southern-pacific-rr-lactapp-1994.